Oh, I can't wait for Skunky to weigh in on this. Particularly the short-acting patent extension and 20% active ingredient stuff. And R&D budgets vs. marketing budgets.
There are drug reps in that office feeding the staff every day, but he takes leftovers for lunch. The problem is that the nurses are used to great lunches, the patients are used to free samples, and everyone tolerates the schedule-derailing time succubus that is the drug rep pitch.
Granted, there is a need for education on new drugs. Unfortunately, a salesman is not an acceptable source of information for physicians. It would be like going to a Honda dealership and asking the sales guy to tell you which car to buy -- a Honda, a Toyota, or a Mini. Now, many drug companies have started to pay prominent doctors in a given area to give talks on their drugs to their peers. Everytime I see Dr. Jarvis' Plavix commercial I want to puke and wonder how the specialty boards could tolerate this unprofessional bit of whoring...and then I remember the rx companies give the boards and the AMA a ton of money, too.
If you don't like free lunchers, you should refuse to be a free sampler. If you want to do something about the spiraling cost of healthcare, find out the cost of a drug in it's long acting form vs. the short acting generic and decide if you'd be willing to pay for the difference if you were using your own money. Try generics first whenever possible. Factor in the costs in your healthcare decisions. If I have a prescription for a drug with no generic equivalent, I always ask the pharmacist what the cost is -- not what my co-pay is -- and then decide if I'd buy it if I had to pay the whole cost. So many people take the attitude that they should get the "best" drug available -- the newest and most expensive -- because they have insurance and don't really have to pay for the whole cost. They forget that the next year's premium is based on what the group spent this year plus 9-12%.
When more patients refuse the free samples, maybe healthcare providers would show a bit more courage and stop seeing the reps.
There are drug reps in that office feeding the staff every day, but he takes leftovers for lunch. The problem is that the nurses are used to great lunches, the patients are used to free samples, and everyone tolerates the schedule-derailing time succubus that is the drug rep pitch.
Granted, there is a need for education on new drugs. Unfortunately, a salesman is not an acceptable source of information for physicians. It would be like going to a Honda dealership and asking the sales guy to tell you which car to buy -- a Honda, a Toyota, or a Mini. Now, many drug companies have started to pay prominent doctors in a given area to give talks on their drugs to their peers. Everytime I see Dr. Jarvis' Plavix commercial I want to puke and wonder how the specialty boards could tolerate this unprofessional bit of whoring...and then I remember the rx companies give the boards and the AMA a ton of money, too.
If you don't like free lunchers, you should refuse to be a free sampler. If you want to do something about the spiraling cost of healthcare, find out the cost of a drug in it's long acting form vs. the short acting generic and decide if you'd be willing to pay for the difference if you were using your own money. Try generics first whenever possible. Factor in the costs in your healthcare decisions. If I have a prescription for a drug with no generic equivalent, I always ask the pharmacist what the cost is -- not what my co-pay is -- and then decide if I'd buy it if I had to pay the whole cost. So many people take the attitude that they should get the "best" drug available -- the newest and most expensive -- because they have insurance and don't really have to pay for the whole cost. They forget that the next year's premium is based on what the group spent this year plus 9-12%.
When more patients refuse the free samples, maybe healthcare providers would show a bit more courage and stop seeing the reps.